OK, so we ended with just one entry for the Hawk & Keeva Contest. Thank you Justin! I liked this one. Keeva's clothes were awesome, especially. I like the pose too. It might have been fun to see her all black eyes, but, all in all, a solid piece.
Clothing is important in the setting, as it varies strongly from place to place, with Drifters and Haulers cultivating their own personal styles. I like the black widow bracelet. Very nerd chic.
So, to wrap up this art drive, lets start the next one! (or you can do this one and I'll add you submission, see load 13)
This time, we are looking for Sharren Vickers, a 7 foot tall cyborg killing machine. Think of her as a faceless armored demon, Her face replaced by a heavy armor plate, with pin-hole cameras spread over it rather than eyes.
To further distance her self from her humble human beginnings, her legs are set up different as well, with backwards knees. This give her impressive jumping ability, despite her weight. Sharren does not have many built in guns, but she does like her 14 mm assault rifle. She also like engaging in hand to hand fighting with normal humans, though this is a horribly unfair fight.
Thanks again for all you help!
Jesse Out.
This is our science fiction project, which has been a long time dream for me. It started years ago as a gritty sci-fi role playing game, but it has turned into so much more. It looks like two books are spinning off of the RPG materiel. Please enjoy the snippets as they go up, and share it with any one you think would enjoy our work, and leave comments! I very much like feed back.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Comms Load 14 - Glory days III
Rich loaded up a few choice items into the runnabout. It was an older model, a mercedes all wheel drive. It fit right in with the other beat up trucks and ATV runnabouts on the streets of landing city. With the 4 passengers and his crew, it was a tight squeeze.
Molly the intern rode on up front, squeezed between Richard and Doo Min Park, the ships head mechanic. Becca and Horse rode in back with the other 3 passengers. Rich liked the way the girl smelled. It was rare that rich got on with women so young. Or ones from earth.
Molly was 26, and in an advanced xenobiology program. Like most traveling kids from earth, her daddy was richer than bacon soup. The girl had spent over $ 200,000.00 UN to get out here, as well as 4 months on his ship. Her boss was out here to study the local wild life. Rich was more interested in studying her.
Tonight would likely be his last chance at that, so he figured a grand send off was in order.
The Green Knight, the lodge that he had chosen was only a few minutes deeper into the city. It looked much like the rest of landing city, durable prefab walls, dirty from 20 years of rain and wind, but other wise undamaged. The front doors had a scene of a knight in green armor beheading someone.
There were a handful of other vehicles outside. Nothing special, just the usual mix of ford and subaru electric trucks. It meant one important thing to Richard however. It meant that there would be locals drinking there tonight. Rich considered that to be free advertising. the sooner folks know that a merchant is in town, the sooner he can get down to business.
The interior of the bar was about the same as the outside, stout and worn, but well kept. It was early, the equvalent of 4pm, but the locals seemed to be in dinner mode. Most of the patrons were bent over plates of food, or enjoying a pale colored beer at the bar. Rich checked his Dattoo, it told him this was a bit early for dinner by local custom. Rich put it aside for later. He'd have to update his data on this system if custom had changed.
Rich looked over at Isaac, the college professor, and smiled. back to business, he thought.
"Isaac, let me buy you and yours one last meal. It's the least I can offer by way of farewell" Rich knew that Isaac would have to say yes, Earth folk a prickly about etiquette Besides, he thought, this had been the most interesting group of passengers he'd ever moved. Or at least the most fun.
"I suppose I'll accept" Isaac responded in his London accent.
"Good, good" Richard smiled "Sort out a place for us to sit, and I'll arrange for some good food. YOur journey should end with better fare than protein cubes" Richard felt his own palate deserved a break from ship food as well. Those things get bland pretty quickly.
Richard sauntered over to the inn keeper, and put on his most winning smile. the innkeep was not a fat man which meant he was careful with his money. No splurging on food for him self.
"Hello, Richard Higgins, Cap'n of the Glory Days. We just landed and were hoping to crash here while we did business in town." Richard felt confident, he had done this several times before, and usually got a good deal. The Innkeeper had a good poker face though, this might be tougher he thought.
"Carl Talent, " the inn keeper said, offering his hand. "I have rooms, but they ain't cheap. I get a lot of business here."
"No other ships in orbit, it can't be too crowed just now." Rich spoke freely, he figured the folks on parzifal were not the sort to mince words. "but to tell you what I think, I usually make pretty fair trades at the place I stay." He reached into his travel coat, and old all-weather duster, and pulled out a bottle of Capital Brewery porter, good stuff. "I brought several kegs of this from Orion on my last haul. I can show you the manifest and brew dates, it's good stuff" Richard handed the bottle to the Inn Keep, who looked it over carefully.
"Well, this may be worth some time in my rooms" Carl was smiling. Not the broad beaming smile of a child with a new toy, but certainly the smile of a man about to get paid. "You have a keg of it with you now?" he asked, opening the beer as he looked up.
"Tell me if you like it first. This bottle is on me" Rich replied. It always looks better to share samples freely. Carl took a short pull from the bottle, then a second, longer draw. He looked at the bottle again, regarding the art on the label.
"I like it" Carl replied. "I'll give you two rooms for two days for the keg, and call it fair. We really are crowded Carl regarded Richard with cool eyes as he took a third pull from the bottle. This was the deal Richard wanted, so he saw no reason to get greedy with the man.
"Fair enough, provided I get a discount on tonight's dinner. Charge my crew as you will, but I have to feed a lot of folks tonight."
"I'll knock down the bill, but not by much. Foods getting short, and the main harvest looks like it won't be happening " Carl's face was still mellow, though the beer seemed to reaching him a little. Strong stuff.
"What's going on with the harvest? the welcome committee that met us at the pad implied the colony is having some serious trouble." Richard trailed off. Carl's face had taken on a different set, sad more than upset.
"See that rack?" Carl said, pointing at a gun rack near the door. It was full, with a few more leaning on the wall below it. "Nine months ago, you would have seen one or two pieces on there." Carls eyes drifted to one of the patrons that Richard had not paid much attention to. The man only had one arm. "Somethings got the Jackalopes stirred up, and the Apachesaurs have been coming in droves to hunt them. ain't even a little safe in the fields, and we kill four or five critters in the city every day. We've lost over a thousand people so far. it'll be Worse when we miss the harvest."
Rich let it sink in. that's a huge number of people. Clearly, there was a real problem here. Now, how to help and profit at the same time.....
Molly the intern rode on up front, squeezed between Richard and Doo Min Park, the ships head mechanic. Becca and Horse rode in back with the other 3 passengers. Rich liked the way the girl smelled. It was rare that rich got on with women so young. Or ones from earth.
Molly was 26, and in an advanced xenobiology program. Like most traveling kids from earth, her daddy was richer than bacon soup. The girl had spent over $ 200,000.00 UN to get out here, as well as 4 months on his ship. Her boss was out here to study the local wild life. Rich was more interested in studying her.
Tonight would likely be his last chance at that, so he figured a grand send off was in order.
The Green Knight, the lodge that he had chosen was only a few minutes deeper into the city. It looked much like the rest of landing city, durable prefab walls, dirty from 20 years of rain and wind, but other wise undamaged. The front doors had a scene of a knight in green armor beheading someone.
There were a handful of other vehicles outside. Nothing special, just the usual mix of ford and subaru electric trucks. It meant one important thing to Richard however. It meant that there would be locals drinking there tonight. Rich considered that to be free advertising. the sooner folks know that a merchant is in town, the sooner he can get down to business.
The interior of the bar was about the same as the outside, stout and worn, but well kept. It was early, the equvalent of 4pm, but the locals seemed to be in dinner mode. Most of the patrons were bent over plates of food, or enjoying a pale colored beer at the bar. Rich checked his Dattoo, it told him this was a bit early for dinner by local custom. Rich put it aside for later. He'd have to update his data on this system if custom had changed.
Rich looked over at Isaac, the college professor, and smiled. back to business, he thought.
"Isaac, let me buy you and yours one last meal. It's the least I can offer by way of farewell" Rich knew that Isaac would have to say yes, Earth folk a prickly about etiquette Besides, he thought, this had been the most interesting group of passengers he'd ever moved. Or at least the most fun.
"I suppose I'll accept" Isaac responded in his London accent.
"Good, good" Richard smiled "Sort out a place for us to sit, and I'll arrange for some good food. YOur journey should end with better fare than protein cubes" Richard felt his own palate deserved a break from ship food as well. Those things get bland pretty quickly.
Richard sauntered over to the inn keeper, and put on his most winning smile. the innkeep was not a fat man which meant he was careful with his money. No splurging on food for him self.
"Hello, Richard Higgins, Cap'n of the Glory Days. We just landed and were hoping to crash here while we did business in town." Richard felt confident, he had done this several times before, and usually got a good deal. The Innkeeper had a good poker face though, this might be tougher he thought.
"Carl Talent, " the inn keeper said, offering his hand. "I have rooms, but they ain't cheap. I get a lot of business here."
"No other ships in orbit, it can't be too crowed just now." Rich spoke freely, he figured the folks on parzifal were not the sort to mince words. "but to tell you what I think, I usually make pretty fair trades at the place I stay." He reached into his travel coat, and old all-weather duster, and pulled out a bottle of Capital Brewery porter, good stuff. "I brought several kegs of this from Orion on my last haul. I can show you the manifest and brew dates, it's good stuff" Richard handed the bottle to the Inn Keep, who looked it over carefully.
"Well, this may be worth some time in my rooms" Carl was smiling. Not the broad beaming smile of a child with a new toy, but certainly the smile of a man about to get paid. "You have a keg of it with you now?" he asked, opening the beer as he looked up.
"Tell me if you like it first. This bottle is on me" Rich replied. It always looks better to share samples freely. Carl took a short pull from the bottle, then a second, longer draw. He looked at the bottle again, regarding the art on the label.
"I like it" Carl replied. "I'll give you two rooms for two days for the keg, and call it fair. We really are crowded Carl regarded Richard with cool eyes as he took a third pull from the bottle. This was the deal Richard wanted, so he saw no reason to get greedy with the man.
"Fair enough, provided I get a discount on tonight's dinner. Charge my crew as you will, but I have to feed a lot of folks tonight."
"I'll knock down the bill, but not by much. Foods getting short, and the main harvest looks like it won't be happening " Carl's face was still mellow, though the beer seemed to reaching him a little. Strong stuff.
"What's going on with the harvest? the welcome committee that met us at the pad implied the colony is having some serious trouble." Richard trailed off. Carl's face had taken on a different set, sad more than upset.
"See that rack?" Carl said, pointing at a gun rack near the door. It was full, with a few more leaning on the wall below it. "Nine months ago, you would have seen one or two pieces on there." Carls eyes drifted to one of the patrons that Richard had not paid much attention to. The man only had one arm. "Somethings got the Jackalopes stirred up, and the Apachesaurs have been coming in droves to hunt them. ain't even a little safe in the fields, and we kill four or five critters in the city every day. We've lost over a thousand people so far. it'll be Worse when we miss the harvest."
Rich let it sink in. that's a huge number of people. Clearly, there was a real problem here. Now, how to help and profit at the same time.....
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Comms load 13 - Chimera drawing challange!
Hello my loyal following! The "Biggie" drawing contest has brought us one step closer to the goal of completing the RPG. I had two submissions, and here they are!
Nick has given us a highly detailed, high tech character with an abundance of storage places on his body armor. This guy would be on the rangy, thin side for a Biggie, but the drawing conveys the 7 foot height. Not all Biggies choose to work out and stay buff. Here we have an explorer/biologist, used to working in hostile environments. Nick completes the image of the explorer/scientist with a sensory enhancement/air filter mask.
Justin has given us a view of what the Biggies looked like after the reformation wars. This guy is in great shape, and has manged to get himself on the October page of 'Man!' magazine's charity calendar. Seen here in a preserved section of old Chicago, Ip Cheng is trying to look "historic" and "sexy" at the same time. Yes, he is leaning on a blue mail box.
The rifle is a recent model from Colt, the HAR-89, firing the vaunted 12x130mm assault rifle cartridge.
I like both approaches; I think Nick had some great tech ideas, and Justin really nailed the sense of size. Comment and tell me your thoughts!
Biggies wear a bio-tech answer to early powered armor, used in the Reformation War as shock troopers. While they were not quick to produce, they were notably less expensive, and required far less maintanence than the powered exoskeltons of the day, and could operate in the field much, much longer.
No one ever thought they would be able to produce children (or that any baseline woman would be interested in trying it). However, after the wars, those that were transitioned into civilian life often had children, and the genes that make them so large are dominant. This led to the continuation of the line into modern times.
Standing 7 feet tall, and weighing in excess of 350 lbs, these guys can do some serious damage in a fight. However, their natural dexterity is not any better than a base line human's, and they are known to be a little dim (though this may be exaggerated by prejudice). Off of Earth, they tend to find work in mainly labor and security jobs, again, due to prejudice.
THANKS AGAIN GUYS! All caps, because I mean it!
Next Challenge - Hawk O'Hansen and/or Keeva "Smith." They're a couple.
Hawk: Description - Star ship pilot/owner who likes to wear cowboy hats, known for having a western flavor to his mode of dress, but still has a habit of wearing his ship suit while aboard his vessel, the Mike Tyson. He's on the taller side, and has a sturdy, but not exaggerated build. He is ruggedly handsome, unscarred, and wears a smug look most of the time. His dattoo (data tattoo) is typically displaying a hawk on his left forearm when in screen saver mode. He loves to fly, and favors a bit of a five o'clock shadow when Keeva is not around.
Keeva: An attractive woman, with strong, angular features. Dark hair with lighter highlights and jet black eyes (bio-grafted IR/UV/low-light adapted eyes, iris takes up all visible area) set her apart from the crowd. She is a Greyhound, and therefore in epic physical shape, and likes to show that off by wearing her ship suit open to reveal her...feminine assets. She has a collection of sunglasses to guard her sensitive eyes when ever she is planet side or in brighter ship environments.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Comms Load 12 - Hackers
So, we have here another art piece by Victory B!
After he read a little bit about hackers in the RPG source material, he decided to draw us this rather dapper one. It seems that while some hackers go the post-humanist route and install computers in their own bodies, this gentleman is going old school.
He is wearing data glasses, clear under most conditions, but then they opaque and become a full immersion display when one is fully online. His glasses have a hard wire in case he gets hit by a data feed disruptor, which can create electromagnetic white noise and upset wireless connections. Most such glasses are wireless (this also means the glasses themselves can be hacked, though they have limited memory).
He is also wearing data gloves, which allow him to interact with his sim (simulated) environment. He keeps his data tablet (his computer) inside his many-folded top, to keep it out of the way.
Many hackers choose to dress nice, and look rich. Firstly because dressing nice is a staple of Earth culture, and this man is clearly from Earth by his mode of dress. Secondly, many hackers are either well paid professional security specialists or successful criminals, and not rough and ready street thugs.
Hacking is a job for the subtle, the quick witted, and the intelligent. At least, this is the attitude that prevails among the elite hackers of Earth and Orion. Other colonies have slightly varying attitudes. I'll post up Vic's notes on this later on, he had more to say about what inspired him. Also, the "Biggie" challenge comes to a close this week, so if you have a submission for a 7 foot tall Asian either in civies or war gear, lemme know, cause I was gonna post the results on Friday!
Friday, November 16, 2012
Comms Load 11 - Mercenary art!
Hiya Gang!
More art from Victory! This is the style we are working towards, and I want to thank our artists for their contributions! Keep it coming please!
This merc is boasting some medium weight full body armor from Panzermann, a New Prussian company that specializes in non-powered body armor. The panels are semi-rigid, forming a nano-materiel that absorbs energy and is self-healing (it flows to fill in holes as they are made). The under layer is a ballistic fiber that is semi resistant to sharp objects as well. Overall, this armor can stop most handguns, and shrug off bites and scratches from aggressive fauna under 50 kilos in mass.
She's holding a sterling arms SS-42-mkII assault rifle, which fires the PAX 7x45mm rifle cartridge. This ammo is very common and is sold nearly anywhere. While not as feared as the 5x45mm caseless cartridge, and not fitting as many rounds in the magazine, caseless ammo is often not available on the gods-forsaken worlds and colonies this young lady finds her work taking her to.
Her pistol however, is top of the line; an H&K PD-2380. Their flagship pistol of that year, it fires 10x20mm caseless, a hyper-velocity round. Accurate at 80 meters, with a muzzle velocity of 750 M/s this pistol hits very hard, but has a matching recoil.
More art from Victory! This is the style we are working towards, and I want to thank our artists for their contributions! Keep it coming please!
This merc is boasting some medium weight full body armor from Panzermann, a New Prussian company that specializes in non-powered body armor. The panels are semi-rigid, forming a nano-materiel that absorbs energy and is self-healing (it flows to fill in holes as they are made). The under layer is a ballistic fiber that is semi resistant to sharp objects as well. Overall, this armor can stop most handguns, and shrug off bites and scratches from aggressive fauna under 50 kilos in mass.
She's holding a sterling arms SS-42-mkII assault rifle, which fires the PAX 7x45mm rifle cartridge. This ammo is very common and is sold nearly anywhere. While not as feared as the 5x45mm caseless cartridge, and not fitting as many rounds in the magazine, caseless ammo is often not available on the gods-forsaken worlds and colonies this young lady finds her work taking her to.
Her pistol however, is top of the line; an H&K PD-2380. Their flagship pistol of that year, it fires 10x20mm caseless, a hyper-velocity round. Accurate at 80 meters, with a muzzle velocity of 750 M/s this pistol hits very hard, but has a matching recoil.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Comms Load 10 - Sample of Avi's work.
Hello readers!
This is cut from our main fiction project, a book for which we don't have a title yet. This is the 4th chapter, and we're pretty happy with it so far. Please share your thoughts by commenting! We really like the feedback, and you can help us make the story better! So please speak up!
Anyway, Hawk and and Keeva only recently met, and they are not from the same colony, not at all. Hawk is from Gliese, the oldest human colony, and it was founded by some very dedicated research scientists. The culture there is very open and pragmatic. Also, the gravity is rather high, so our good ship's captain is stronger than most Earth folk, though not used to the outdoors as Gliese is a frozen ball of ice.
They are on their way to Michi Gami, a new and under-serviced colony, looking to sell vapor collectors at a hefty mark up, and Keeva is getting a tour of the ship. The hangar is off limits to the ship's passengers.
-----
“So how you getting along with Jimmy?” he asked, the contempt leaking into his voice seemingly of its own volition. Fuck! he thought to himself. Yup, that’s jealousy alright.
Keeva glanced over at him, her face registering a small amount of surprise. 'Is that jealousy I hear?' she mused. This time she was mentally laughing AND hugging herself, but judging by the look on his face she had to tread carefully. Jim was an interesting diversion and clearly had information she could use, but Hawk was the reason she was here in the first place, the reason she’d finally left the Rok and put her past on hold. She wanted him around and she wanted him interested, not angry.
“Oh, he’s alright, I guess…for a kid who I caught trying to hack into your shuttle bay.” She’d pegged Hawk for someone who reads people pretty well, so she knew this nugget of info she was tossing his way could be old news to the captain, but she’d also guessed he’d take it for what it was: an expression of interest.
“Was he now? It’s rude to go peeking behind locked doors in ‘nother man’s home…” Hawk gave her a little smile. “Too bad for him these old locks use different software than newer ones.” Hawk seemed unfazed enough that Keeva guessed that she was right in her assumptions, and Hawk already knew something.
Hawk was keeping a tight grip on his emotions, as tight a grip as he could. That little shit was sneaking around, who knows what he’s looking for, but aboard Mike Tyson, there’s plenty to find. The shuttle bay was the least of all his worries on that score. ‘Later,’ he thought.
“Wanna see why I keep the door locked?” Hawk gave the lady a knowing wink, as he led her down the spinal corridor, out of sight of the common area. She had to admit, she was curious, and though Hawk seemed genuinely irritated it was just for the shortest of moments.
“I was a pilot,” he continued hesitantly, “for the United Nations Colonial Navy. I was pretty good, they said. Too good to do what I wanted. They had me set on a course for drivin’ space fighters.” Hawk shook his head, a look of frustrated nostalgia coming over him as they rode the lift up to the shuttle bay.
“Thing is, it ain’t like the entertainment sims, it’s boring. All you do is drift towards a target, and hope your stealth systems don’t fail. When you get close, or think you’ve been spotted, ya rush in, drop your sharks, and cut ‘em up with your laser until you get tagged by point defense, or your sharks hit something, and you run away back home.”
Keeva laughed a bit. “It sounds like the sims, to me,” she tried politely. The lift stopped, and they headed into the large bay, meant to house any number of different shuttle types. It was divided into four sections, each with an airlock. The bay was old style, which meant that there was a lot of open space and equipment to refuel and repair smaller craft. The two aft bays were empty, but the lights were still dim in the forward bays which were clearly linked to motion sensors. They kept walking forward as Hawk continued.
“Except for the really boring, slow ride in to the target, and the really boring ride home, and the part where you program the ship to do everything ‘cause you’re too far away to actually see the bad guys.”
“Sides, there aren't wars any more, right?” Hawk smiled. “A man like me, he needs to feel himself flying. I wanted to be a surface fighter pilot, or an STO driver; a job where I’d be out doing work, instead of sitting in a sim pod, playing with myself and pretending to be a combat pilot.”
Keeva smirked at that, desperately wanting to make a smart-ass remark, but she stowed it in favor of letting Hawk continue his narrative. Everything he was saying confirmed what little she knew of him.
“I got washed out. They wouldn't let me re-up unless I stayed on fighters, and I was not gonna have it. I wanted the rush of STO flight, the feel of defeating gravity, and to actually fly. That’s why I got HER,” Hawk finished grandly, as he gestured to the shuttle lurking in the starboard hangar area.
He had timed it well, the lights flicked on just as he raised his hand to wave at the ship. Keeva had seen a fair number of zero gravity shuttles, as well as countless versions of the Spencer, the most common STO shuttle in the UN, but the beast crouched in the starboard bay was none of those things. It was long, sleek and aggressive, something she had only seen before in sims. The shuttle in front of her was all engine with a long tail, plus two massive air breathers and Stubby wings that seemed like an afterthought. Brutally efficient. 'No way,' she thought.
“AL-356-Model 2 HOTBOX surface to orbit shuttle. I call her 'Maybelle.'” Hawk beamed at his baby, showing more than a sprinkle of pride in the New Prussian combat shuttle he had parked in his hanger bay. “She’s nearly twice as fast as a Spencer and a helluva lot more maneuverable. She’ll break orbit in vertical flight, if you open the throttle all the way, but that will trash the local environment." He grinned as he turned back towards her. "Her gravity compensators make it so even a low-grav softies like yourself can ride her at full speed without gettin' killed. She’s also got better protection than the Orion Governor…not to mention she’s awful pretty.”
Keeva was suitably impressed, and Hawk’s obvious delight in his shuttle was infectious, but she couldn't resist ribbing him a bit on that last remark. “Pretty, huh? Pretty holey from the looks of her. She’s got more marks from AA fire than a veteran combat cruiser.”
“‘She may not look like much, but she’s got it where it counts, kid,’” Hawk quoted and quipped.
She threw her head back and laughed freely. “Is that right, Han? I mean Hawk,” she teased with a smile. “I like the pin-up girl on the intake,” Keeva said as she pointed out the slightly scorched dark-haired woman painted under the forward wing. “Looks like you have a type….” she trailed off playfully.
“Well, what if I do? Not my fault you look like her,” he smiled. “Every good fighter is named after a cantankerous bitch or a pretty lady. That lady was both.” He looked at the picture up and down. “You’re right though; I gotta get Willy up here to patch her up some more. Bought some replacement parts back on the Rok.”
He scratched the back of his neck, and looked over the ship a moment, delaying the inevitable. Hawk was a bit uncertain of how to phrase the next question, but he decided it would be best just to plow ahead.
“So that’s me, a combat pilot turned hauler, looking for a good rush.” He sighed and walked towards a collection of crates, strapped down with cargo netting. “So, what have you got under the hood?” He had a sexy grin, but a harder cast to his eyes.
“You wanna see it again?” she asked coyly as he leaned against a rolling tool cabinet. She made as if to play with the seal on her ship suit. Hawk smiled for a moment, but Keeva knew it was not a show he was looking for.
“How is it that a slender lady like your own self can take down a trained, mod’d body guard in hand to hand combat? I know you’re strong, and how.” He was still smiling, but it was clear that this was a business smile, and Keeva knew he really wanted some answers. “That boy you broke? At the very least he had wired reflexes and a pain editor. I was gonna die for sure, ‘til you fixed him. He was too fast for me.” Hawk softened just a bit. “Thank you for that, by the way. I owe you one.” He gave her a half grin, which she returned, their ‘thing’ of quoting Star Wars together showing no signs of getting old. Clearing his throat and letting the smile of camaraderie drop from his face, he began again. “Still, I gotta know who you are if you’re gonna ride on my ship.”
Hawk saw Keeva tense up and kicked a rolling work stool her direction, his way of proffering her a chair and the only thing he could think of to keep her from bolting. He sat down himself, waiting for her to begin, or run. Her past was obviously a touchy subject to say the least, and he didn’t want to push her too fast, but regardless, he had to know.
Keeva slowly took a seat, her mind in turmoil. No point in running when stuck in space, and not many men would offer a dock side hooker a front seat into their life and livelihood; Hawk must have some semblance of an open mind. On the other hand, he was UN military. The UN was not known for its social tolerance.
She chewed the corner of her lip as she filtered through her thoughts, her black eyes reflecting the running lights on the floor. What to tell, what not to tell…
“I’m a Greyhound,” she heard herself say. Her own shock at just blurting out the truth was mirrored on Hawk’s face, and in different circumstances the look on his face would’ve been pretty damn funny, but Keeva wasn’t laughing.
“That…explains a lot,” Hawk said slowly. Greyhounds were Chimeras: genetically engineered people, bred for war and not much else. Greyhounds were one of the first types ever created, back before the colonization days. Though he knew of them, and the prejudices most Earth-folk held against Chimeras, Hawk personally had never met one before as none had settled on Gliese. Clearly, her ability to fight was closer to the Sims then he had thought.
When she kept silent, her black eyes attempting to bore a hole through his skull, he prompted her with a soft voice. “Go on, Keeva; I think there’s more to tell, and I ain’t running.”
She blinked at that. Was this man for real? Smoking hot, dynamite in the sack, a Star Wars lover, and now he takes a bombshell piece of news without freaking? She blinked again in attempt to hide her non-existent tears. “Half, really. Half-Greyhound,” she clarified at his raised eyebrow. “Dad was baseline, more or less. Mom was the Greyhound. Mostly pure, so she was what you’d expect, strong, hyperactive, and not much bouncing around her skull besides a fixation with shiny objects and a continuous urge to kick some ass. She was real pretty, though.” Keeva couldn't keep the sorrow out of her voice. “She had a good heart.” Keeva’s face took on a look that matched her voice as she remembered, something she rarely let herself do, and never in front of other people. “Dad loved her, and she him. Don’t see it very often, what they had. He would've done anything for her, and he did.” She paused, her expression hardening.
Hawk ached to see such love and loss on her face, and like a Shakespearean tragedy he almost didn’t want to hear any more, guessing what must come next. “Dad hid what she was best he could from the neighbors and such, but they found out in the end. Mama never told me what they accused him of, but we both knew it was our fault.”
“How could it be your fault?” Hawk was a little stunned. Earth folk acted like elitist pricks some times, but could they really be like that?
“How could it not be? No one likes Chimeras; something I always knew but never understood why.” She spat out in reply. She was looking at the tread of the deck plating as she continued her story, studiously avoiding Hawk’s gaze. “Earth’s been shipping Chimeras off-planet since they passed the involuntary resettlement act. Dad ran in big money circles, elite people. They found something to pin on him. That’s what they do. I was seven when they took my father away from us…” Keeva kept her face looking away, reigning in her emotions.
“Mama didn’t have much choice,” she started again. “Without Dad, we had to make our way off-world. It’s too hard for our kind on Earth. She was too hyper to hold normal work, and the taxes, well…We’d end up like dad did. She made it her mission to find him,” she grinned devilishly in recollection, “and that woman was always better with a good mission.”
“I can imagine she was,” Hawk added, seeing Keeva’s pride in her mother, the fighter, seeing her strength and determination shining through her daughter, the survivor. “But I had no idea it was so bad on Earth.” Hawk fixed with a serious expression. “It’s not like that on Gliese. We live side by side with Chimeras. The Cats have it better than baselines; they're adapted to the environment.”
Hawk was still a bit aghast at Keeva’s tale, not quite able to grasp the concept of such blatant hatred. Could it really be that bad back on Earth? Unfortunately, it explained all the negative comments about being a Cat-fucker and the like, phrases he had simply chalked up to hazing when he was back in basic training. Keeva was not done, however, so he brought his mind back to her narration.
“We ended up on Alpha Centari, and somehow my mother found Olav. Or he found her; I never was fully certain how that came about.” This time both Hawk’s eyebrows found his forehead. Here was an interesting piece of intel, and it made a few more tidbits click into place. The little devil who hung out on his shoulder, the one who didn’t like Hawk all that much, whispered how that was the only reason Keeva showed up in that firefight: not to save his ass, but to settle some score with Olav. But she was here, telling him this. That had to mean something, and he was holding onto that hope that he was more than a vehicle to revenge.
“Either way,” Keeva continued, oblivious to Hawk’s internal struggle, “She did what she could to find Dad. And then she died. She must have been nearly 60 by then. We don’t live much past that.” Keeva added that last part as an aside, a little pointed. “She never discovered where he’d been shipped.” She stopped to swallow the sudden lump in her throat. “I resumed the mission.” Keeva stared at a point beyond Hawk, lost in thought.
“You find your pa?” Hawk couldn’t help but ask, needing to know how this part of the story ended.
She gave a terse nod, her mouth set in a thin line. “Yes. They sent him to Aurora. I found out a few years after a colony pox had taken him. Olav did his damnedest to keep that from me as long as he could. Several years of labor’s worth, point of fact.”
“That fucker.” Keeva’s head snapped up to look at Hawk as he spoke, she was startled by the iron fury in his voice. “Gotta say, I’m mighty glad he took a bullet to the head. The kind of man who would string along a young girl’s hopes of finding her father, ain’t a man who deserves to live.”
Keeva felt a grin begin to creep on her face again. How did Hawk constantly do that to her? She had not smiled so freely in years. “No argument here, Hawk. I have to ask though, you carry ship-safe rounds in that gun?" The look on his face was all the answer she needed. “I just wish that bullet was enough to shuffle him loose. He’s got more than mod’d out goons as protection from the elements,” she explained at his questioning glance.
Hawk nodded with a frown. “Guess I should’ve figured he be mod’d himself. But a man’s gotta dream, right?”
“And what do you dream about, Mr. O’Hanson?,” Keeva asked with a seductive grin, leaning forward to rest her elbows on her knees. Her ship suit was still somewhat unsealed and the generous view of her cleavage was more than a perk, it was an invitation.
Hawk picked up on the change in atmosphere, immediately recognizing that share-time was over. He was fine with that; she’d given him more than he thought she would. Plus, a man had to have his priorities.
He mimicked her posture. “At the moment?” His gaze turned molten. “Re-discovering what that spot between your breasts tastes like.”
Her breath hitched. “Can’t say I’ve tried it myself,” she said with a smoky voice, “but I reckon it’s gotta be better than that sludge y’all call tea in the mess hall.”
He could help it: Hawk barked in laughter. “Ain’t no doubt on that score, darlin’,” he managed between guffaws. “You’re a straight shot of sexy, and that tea’s a straight shot of caffeinated shit.” His laughter slowed as he looked at her, taking her in. “Good to know we got more in common than a trilogy of old flicks and a fondness for dancing without clothes on. Thank you for talking to me, Keeva. Means a lot.” His voice had dipped again, conveying his sincerity.
Keeva looked almost bashful for a moment. “Don’t mention it, sugar.” Then she was back to being a hard ass. “Ever.”
“A gentleman never kisses and tells, darling.” Hawk gave her a wink. “Lucky for you, I don’t either. Secret’s safe with me. That bottom lip of yours, however, really isn’t.” His gaze zeroed in on the affore mentioned lip as he started to roll his chair closer, she had set him on fire without even touching him.
This is cut from our main fiction project, a book for which we don't have a title yet. This is the 4th chapter, and we're pretty happy with it so far. Please share your thoughts by commenting! We really like the feedback, and you can help us make the story better! So please speak up!
Anyway, Hawk and and Keeva only recently met, and they are not from the same colony, not at all. Hawk is from Gliese, the oldest human colony, and it was founded by some very dedicated research scientists. The culture there is very open and pragmatic. Also, the gravity is rather high, so our good ship's captain is stronger than most Earth folk, though not used to the outdoors as Gliese is a frozen ball of ice.
They are on their way to Michi Gami, a new and under-serviced colony, looking to sell vapor collectors at a hefty mark up, and Keeva is getting a tour of the ship. The hangar is off limits to the ship's passengers.
-----
“So how you getting along with Jimmy?” he asked, the contempt leaking into his voice seemingly of its own volition. Fuck! he thought to himself. Yup, that’s jealousy alright.
Keeva glanced over at him, her face registering a small amount of surprise. 'Is that jealousy I hear?' she mused. This time she was mentally laughing AND hugging herself, but judging by the look on his face she had to tread carefully. Jim was an interesting diversion and clearly had information she could use, but Hawk was the reason she was here in the first place, the reason she’d finally left the Rok and put her past on hold. She wanted him around and she wanted him interested, not angry.
“Oh, he’s alright, I guess…for a kid who I caught trying to hack into your shuttle bay.” She’d pegged Hawk for someone who reads people pretty well, so she knew this nugget of info she was tossing his way could be old news to the captain, but she’d also guessed he’d take it for what it was: an expression of interest.
“Was he now? It’s rude to go peeking behind locked doors in ‘nother man’s home…” Hawk gave her a little smile. “Too bad for him these old locks use different software than newer ones.” Hawk seemed unfazed enough that Keeva guessed that she was right in her assumptions, and Hawk already knew something.
Hawk was keeping a tight grip on his emotions, as tight a grip as he could. That little shit was sneaking around, who knows what he’s looking for, but aboard Mike Tyson, there’s plenty to find. The shuttle bay was the least of all his worries on that score. ‘Later,’ he thought.
“Wanna see why I keep the door locked?” Hawk gave the lady a knowing wink, as he led her down the spinal corridor, out of sight of the common area. She had to admit, she was curious, and though Hawk seemed genuinely irritated it was just for the shortest of moments.
“I was a pilot,” he continued hesitantly, “for the United Nations Colonial Navy. I was pretty good, they said. Too good to do what I wanted. They had me set on a course for drivin’ space fighters.” Hawk shook his head, a look of frustrated nostalgia coming over him as they rode the lift up to the shuttle bay.
“Thing is, it ain’t like the entertainment sims, it’s boring. All you do is drift towards a target, and hope your stealth systems don’t fail. When you get close, or think you’ve been spotted, ya rush in, drop your sharks, and cut ‘em up with your laser until you get tagged by point defense, or your sharks hit something, and you run away back home.”
Keeva laughed a bit. “It sounds like the sims, to me,” she tried politely. The lift stopped, and they headed into the large bay, meant to house any number of different shuttle types. It was divided into four sections, each with an airlock. The bay was old style, which meant that there was a lot of open space and equipment to refuel and repair smaller craft. The two aft bays were empty, but the lights were still dim in the forward bays which were clearly linked to motion sensors. They kept walking forward as Hawk continued.
“Except for the really boring, slow ride in to the target, and the really boring ride home, and the part where you program the ship to do everything ‘cause you’re too far away to actually see the bad guys.”
“Sides, there aren't wars any more, right?” Hawk smiled. “A man like me, he needs to feel himself flying. I wanted to be a surface fighter pilot, or an STO driver; a job where I’d be out doing work, instead of sitting in a sim pod, playing with myself and pretending to be a combat pilot.”
Keeva smirked at that, desperately wanting to make a smart-ass remark, but she stowed it in favor of letting Hawk continue his narrative. Everything he was saying confirmed what little she knew of him.
“I got washed out. They wouldn't let me re-up unless I stayed on fighters, and I was not gonna have it. I wanted the rush of STO flight, the feel of defeating gravity, and to actually fly. That’s why I got HER,” Hawk finished grandly, as he gestured to the shuttle lurking in the starboard hangar area.
He had timed it well, the lights flicked on just as he raised his hand to wave at the ship. Keeva had seen a fair number of zero gravity shuttles, as well as countless versions of the Spencer, the most common STO shuttle in the UN, but the beast crouched in the starboard bay was none of those things. It was long, sleek and aggressive, something she had only seen before in sims. The shuttle in front of her was all engine with a long tail, plus two massive air breathers and Stubby wings that seemed like an afterthought. Brutally efficient. 'No way,' she thought.
“AL-356-Model 2 HOTBOX surface to orbit shuttle. I call her 'Maybelle.'” Hawk beamed at his baby, showing more than a sprinkle of pride in the New Prussian combat shuttle he had parked in his hanger bay. “She’s nearly twice as fast as a Spencer and a helluva lot more maneuverable. She’ll break orbit in vertical flight, if you open the throttle all the way, but that will trash the local environment." He grinned as he turned back towards her. "Her gravity compensators make it so even a low-grav softies like yourself can ride her at full speed without gettin' killed. She’s also got better protection than the Orion Governor…not to mention she’s awful pretty.”
Keeva was suitably impressed, and Hawk’s obvious delight in his shuttle was infectious, but she couldn't resist ribbing him a bit on that last remark. “Pretty, huh? Pretty holey from the looks of her. She’s got more marks from AA fire than a veteran combat cruiser.”
“‘She may not look like much, but she’s got it where it counts, kid,’” Hawk quoted and quipped.
She threw her head back and laughed freely. “Is that right, Han? I mean Hawk,” she teased with a smile. “I like the pin-up girl on the intake,” Keeva said as she pointed out the slightly scorched dark-haired woman painted under the forward wing. “Looks like you have a type….” she trailed off playfully.
“Well, what if I do? Not my fault you look like her,” he smiled. “Every good fighter is named after a cantankerous bitch or a pretty lady. That lady was both.” He looked at the picture up and down. “You’re right though; I gotta get Willy up here to patch her up some more. Bought some replacement parts back on the Rok.”
He scratched the back of his neck, and looked over the ship a moment, delaying the inevitable. Hawk was a bit uncertain of how to phrase the next question, but he decided it would be best just to plow ahead.
“So that’s me, a combat pilot turned hauler, looking for a good rush.” He sighed and walked towards a collection of crates, strapped down with cargo netting. “So, what have you got under the hood?” He had a sexy grin, but a harder cast to his eyes.
“You wanna see it again?” she asked coyly as he leaned against a rolling tool cabinet. She made as if to play with the seal on her ship suit. Hawk smiled for a moment, but Keeva knew it was not a show he was looking for.
“How is it that a slender lady like your own self can take down a trained, mod’d body guard in hand to hand combat? I know you’re strong, and how.” He was still smiling, but it was clear that this was a business smile, and Keeva knew he really wanted some answers. “That boy you broke? At the very least he had wired reflexes and a pain editor. I was gonna die for sure, ‘til you fixed him. He was too fast for me.” Hawk softened just a bit. “Thank you for that, by the way. I owe you one.” He gave her a half grin, which she returned, their ‘thing’ of quoting Star Wars together showing no signs of getting old. Clearing his throat and letting the smile of camaraderie drop from his face, he began again. “Still, I gotta know who you are if you’re gonna ride on my ship.”
Hawk saw Keeva tense up and kicked a rolling work stool her direction, his way of proffering her a chair and the only thing he could think of to keep her from bolting. He sat down himself, waiting for her to begin, or run. Her past was obviously a touchy subject to say the least, and he didn’t want to push her too fast, but regardless, he had to know.
Keeva slowly took a seat, her mind in turmoil. No point in running when stuck in space, and not many men would offer a dock side hooker a front seat into their life and livelihood; Hawk must have some semblance of an open mind. On the other hand, he was UN military. The UN was not known for its social tolerance.
She chewed the corner of her lip as she filtered through her thoughts, her black eyes reflecting the running lights on the floor. What to tell, what not to tell…
“I’m a Greyhound,” she heard herself say. Her own shock at just blurting out the truth was mirrored on Hawk’s face, and in different circumstances the look on his face would’ve been pretty damn funny, but Keeva wasn’t laughing.
“That…explains a lot,” Hawk said slowly. Greyhounds were Chimeras: genetically engineered people, bred for war and not much else. Greyhounds were one of the first types ever created, back before the colonization days. Though he knew of them, and the prejudices most Earth-folk held against Chimeras, Hawk personally had never met one before as none had settled on Gliese. Clearly, her ability to fight was closer to the Sims then he had thought.
When she kept silent, her black eyes attempting to bore a hole through his skull, he prompted her with a soft voice. “Go on, Keeva; I think there’s more to tell, and I ain’t running.”
She blinked at that. Was this man for real? Smoking hot, dynamite in the sack, a Star Wars lover, and now he takes a bombshell piece of news without freaking? She blinked again in attempt to hide her non-existent tears. “Half, really. Half-Greyhound,” she clarified at his raised eyebrow. “Dad was baseline, more or less. Mom was the Greyhound. Mostly pure, so she was what you’d expect, strong, hyperactive, and not much bouncing around her skull besides a fixation with shiny objects and a continuous urge to kick some ass. She was real pretty, though.” Keeva couldn't keep the sorrow out of her voice. “She had a good heart.” Keeva’s face took on a look that matched her voice as she remembered, something she rarely let herself do, and never in front of other people. “Dad loved her, and she him. Don’t see it very often, what they had. He would've done anything for her, and he did.” She paused, her expression hardening.
Hawk ached to see such love and loss on her face, and like a Shakespearean tragedy he almost didn’t want to hear any more, guessing what must come next. “Dad hid what she was best he could from the neighbors and such, but they found out in the end. Mama never told me what they accused him of, but we both knew it was our fault.”
“How could it be your fault?” Hawk was a little stunned. Earth folk acted like elitist pricks some times, but could they really be like that?
“How could it not be? No one likes Chimeras; something I always knew but never understood why.” She spat out in reply. She was looking at the tread of the deck plating as she continued her story, studiously avoiding Hawk’s gaze. “Earth’s been shipping Chimeras off-planet since they passed the involuntary resettlement act. Dad ran in big money circles, elite people. They found something to pin on him. That’s what they do. I was seven when they took my father away from us…” Keeva kept her face looking away, reigning in her emotions.
“Mama didn’t have much choice,” she started again. “Without Dad, we had to make our way off-world. It’s too hard for our kind on Earth. She was too hyper to hold normal work, and the taxes, well…We’d end up like dad did. She made it her mission to find him,” she grinned devilishly in recollection, “and that woman was always better with a good mission.”
“I can imagine she was,” Hawk added, seeing Keeva’s pride in her mother, the fighter, seeing her strength and determination shining through her daughter, the survivor. “But I had no idea it was so bad on Earth.” Hawk fixed with a serious expression. “It’s not like that on Gliese. We live side by side with Chimeras. The Cats have it better than baselines; they're adapted to the environment.”
Hawk was still a bit aghast at Keeva’s tale, not quite able to grasp the concept of such blatant hatred. Could it really be that bad back on Earth? Unfortunately, it explained all the negative comments about being a Cat-fucker and the like, phrases he had simply chalked up to hazing when he was back in basic training. Keeva was not done, however, so he brought his mind back to her narration.
“We ended up on Alpha Centari, and somehow my mother found Olav. Or he found her; I never was fully certain how that came about.” This time both Hawk’s eyebrows found his forehead. Here was an interesting piece of intel, and it made a few more tidbits click into place. The little devil who hung out on his shoulder, the one who didn’t like Hawk all that much, whispered how that was the only reason Keeva showed up in that firefight: not to save his ass, but to settle some score with Olav. But she was here, telling him this. That had to mean something, and he was holding onto that hope that he was more than a vehicle to revenge.
“Either way,” Keeva continued, oblivious to Hawk’s internal struggle, “She did what she could to find Dad. And then she died. She must have been nearly 60 by then. We don’t live much past that.” Keeva added that last part as an aside, a little pointed. “She never discovered where he’d been shipped.” She stopped to swallow the sudden lump in her throat. “I resumed the mission.” Keeva stared at a point beyond Hawk, lost in thought.
“You find your pa?” Hawk couldn’t help but ask, needing to know how this part of the story ended.
She gave a terse nod, her mouth set in a thin line. “Yes. They sent him to Aurora. I found out a few years after a colony pox had taken him. Olav did his damnedest to keep that from me as long as he could. Several years of labor’s worth, point of fact.”
“That fucker.” Keeva’s head snapped up to look at Hawk as he spoke, she was startled by the iron fury in his voice. “Gotta say, I’m mighty glad he took a bullet to the head. The kind of man who would string along a young girl’s hopes of finding her father, ain’t a man who deserves to live.”
Keeva felt a grin begin to creep on her face again. How did Hawk constantly do that to her? She had not smiled so freely in years. “No argument here, Hawk. I have to ask though, you carry ship-safe rounds in that gun?" The look on his face was all the answer she needed. “I just wish that bullet was enough to shuffle him loose. He’s got more than mod’d out goons as protection from the elements,” she explained at his questioning glance.
Hawk nodded with a frown. “Guess I should’ve figured he be mod’d himself. But a man’s gotta dream, right?”
“And what do you dream about, Mr. O’Hanson?,” Keeva asked with a seductive grin, leaning forward to rest her elbows on her knees. Her ship suit was still somewhat unsealed and the generous view of her cleavage was more than a perk, it was an invitation.
Hawk picked up on the change in atmosphere, immediately recognizing that share-time was over. He was fine with that; she’d given him more than he thought she would. Plus, a man had to have his priorities.
He mimicked her posture. “At the moment?” His gaze turned molten. “Re-discovering what that spot between your breasts tastes like.”
Her breath hitched. “Can’t say I’ve tried it myself,” she said with a smoky voice, “but I reckon it’s gotta be better than that sludge y’all call tea in the mess hall.”
He could help it: Hawk barked in laughter. “Ain’t no doubt on that score, darlin’,” he managed between guffaws. “You’re a straight shot of sexy, and that tea’s a straight shot of caffeinated shit.” His laughter slowed as he looked at her, taking her in. “Good to know we got more in common than a trilogy of old flicks and a fondness for dancing without clothes on. Thank you for talking to me, Keeva. Means a lot.” His voice had dipped again, conveying his sincerity.
Keeva looked almost bashful for a moment. “Don’t mention it, sugar.” Then she was back to being a hard ass. “Ever.”
“A gentleman never kisses and tells, darling.” Hawk gave her a wink. “Lucky for you, I don’t either. Secret’s safe with me. That bottom lip of yours, however, really isn’t.” His gaze zeroed in on the affore mentioned lip as he started to roll his chair closer, she had set him on fire without even touching him.
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Comms Load 9 - Further art!
The UN law officers don't always go around in their armor. In places like the flotillas of Alpha Centauri, or Orion, or some of the middle aged colonies, the locals consider themselves a proud part of the UN. In such places, police still wear their white jump-suits, but without the armor, they are somewhat less menacing.
Still, the white uniform has came to mean that the UN is in charge where ever it is seen. I should note that in places that are not at risk of "secessionist activity", the UN tends to send nicer, more complacent police, with attitudes akin to those of 20th century police.
On wilder worlds, or worlds that have attempted secession, the UN deliberately sends rougher, less tolerant police. They do so as a show of force. this approach has had mixed results. It helps them hold onto colonies, but does not usually go a long way towards building good will.
Also, this a challenge to any artists out there, I'm hoping to get some pics of a "Biggie", a 7 foot tall Chimera, essentially a giant Asian person, with lot of muscle and bulk. It does not have to be a soldier type, though the original Biggies were bred for war. Let me know, and email any submissions to me here at the blog!
Thanks for reading,
J
Still, the white uniform has came to mean that the UN is in charge where ever it is seen. I should note that in places that are not at risk of "secessionist activity", the UN tends to send nicer, more complacent police, with attitudes akin to those of 20th century police.
On wilder worlds, or worlds that have attempted secession, the UN deliberately sends rougher, less tolerant police. They do so as a show of force. this approach has had mixed results. It helps them hold onto colonies, but does not usually go a long way towards building good will.
Also, this a challenge to any artists out there, I'm hoping to get some pics of a "Biggie", a 7 foot tall Chimera, essentially a giant Asian person, with lot of muscle and bulk. It does not have to be a soldier type, though the original Biggies were bred for war. Let me know, and email any submissions to me here at the blog!
Thanks for reading,
J
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